Kombolcha massacre

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Kombolcha massacre
Part of the Tigray War
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Kombolcha
Kombolcha (Ethiopia)
Location Kombolcha, Amhara Region, Ethiopia
Date30 October 2021
Target Amhara
Attack type
Civilians massacre
  • UN's aid essentials and WFP trucks looted
  • Private and public properties ransacked and looted
  • Dire situation of the Amhara IDPs [1]
  • Impunity [2]
Deaths100+
PerpetratorsFlag of the Tigray Region.svg Tigray Defense Forces

The Kombolcha massacre was the mass extrajudicial and summary execution of over 100 ethnic Amhara civilian youths by the Tigray Defense Forces in South Wollo, in the Amhara Region of Ethiopia. [3] [4] [5] [6] Bodies of the victims were set on fire at a business compound in the town. [7] Kombolcha was described as a key warring location [8] [9] and is found on the A2 highway leading into Addis Ababa, where the Tigrayan forces were advancing to the capital. Looting of aid, and private and public properties was also reported. Kombolcha town is the industrial hub of the Amhara region. [10] [11] [7]

Contents

Background

The TPLF was the ruling party of Ethiopia that ruled the country for 27 years. [12] Regime changes occurred in 2018 in which the TPLF lost control of federal positions while holding power in the Tigray Region. The power struggle between Abiy Ahmed’s regime and the TPLF led to the Tigray War that started after the Ethiopian military's Northern Command was attacked by TPLF in November 2020. [13] [14] As the war prolonged, the Tigrayan rebels retook most of Tigray and invaded the Amhara and the Afar regions in July 2021, reportedly massacring civilians and causing severe destructions. [15] [16] [17] [18]

Massacre

Kombolcha was captured by the Tigray Defense Forces (TDF) in late October 2021. The massacre of ethnic Amhara civilians occurred on 30 October 2021, following the infiltration of the attackers into the town. Residents reported chaotic nights and gunshots. [19] [20] The massacre of the 100 youths occurred after a year of continuous fighting in the Tigray War, and with the invasion of Tigray forces into the Amhara region. [16] [4] [3] Surviving residents reported that they had spent the day in their homes as gunfire shook the town. [21] TDF combatants summarily executed the youths, and reportedly set the victims on fire at a compound of a Turkish-based company. [7] AAA identified partial victim's list and published testimonies. [22]

Fatalities [22]
Killed (partial list of 100+ total victims)
  1. Mohammed Kedir
  2. Anwar Yimam
  3. Kedir Mohammed
  4. Abdu Kebede
  5. Mohammed Yimam
  6. Kedir Abel
  7. Abdurahman Kassa
  8. Said Adu
  9. Kedir Mohammed Ahmed
  10. Kedir Edris Muhe
  11. Wondosen Abate
  12. Tadesse
  13. Belete
  14. Ashenafi Berew
  15. Abdurahman
  16. Kedir Edris Muhie
  17. Mohammed Yesuf Ali
  18. Aziza Kedir
  19. Edris Said
  20. Habiba Yimam
  21. Erozina Ibrahim
  22. Hawa Nuriye
  23. Zeritu Shifferaw
  24. Hayat Said
  25. Hawa Ali
  26. Muahimed

Looting and ransacking

Tigray forces reportedly looted and ransacked foreign aid essentials, and private and public properties, including the WFP food supplies for malnourished children in Kombolcha. WFP reported that it suspended distributing food aid after Tigray gunmen looted its warehouses, and stole large quantities of essential food supplies while holding aid staff at gunpoint. [10] [11] A UN spokesperson also communicated another mass looting in the town, and the additional hijacking of 18 WFP aid trucks by the TPLF forces. [23] The government reported looting and damages to these manufacturing industries in Kombolcha and Dessie: 10 food processing, 11 leather and textile factories, 3 metal processing factories, 11 Agro-processing, and 10 chemical industries. TPLF also destroyed infrastructure and facilities such as schools and health stations. [11] [24] [25] [26]

IDP crisis

The humanitarian crisis remains dire for Amhara IDPs. [1] Kombolcha and Dessie were already the refugee destinations for millions of Amhara IDPs who fled North Wollo from TPLF attackers. [27] AAA reported the dire situation of the IDPs sheltered in the surroundings of public schools. [28] [29] Civic groups expressed concern on the lack of support from government bodies— stated that the IDPs had not been given attention in both Dessie and Kombolcha. [30] [1]

Reactions

State of Emergency

The November 2021 state of emergency was declared during the TPLF invasion of Kombolcha and after civilians massacre. [31]

Calls for evacuation

The UN and some foreign diplomats urged citizens and families to leave Ethiopia with the state of emergency following occupation of Kombolcha and the killing of the 100 Amhara youths.

Retreat and withdrawal

Reports covered that Kombolcha was recaptured by the Ethiopian Federal army and the Amhara forces, and TPLF retreated out of the town— reversing TPLF's short-lived gains on the war front. [43] [44] TPLF denied defeat and carrying out the massacre. [45]

See also

Related Research Articles

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